EcoNews, KayeSpector, November 21, 2013
The Big
Island of Hawaii has a new law that bans biotech companies, as well as all
open-air growing of genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
The bill
exempts papayas and other GMO crops currently being cultivated and includes
fines of $1,000 a day for violators.
Photo credit: GMO Free Hawaii Island |
Mayor Billy
Kenoi hasn’t indicated his stance on the bill, but he has 10 days to veto it.
The county council could override a veto with a vote from six members.
“WOOHOO! WE
DID IT!” read the Facebook page of GMO Free Hawaii Island. “We ask for your
continued support on the following two items: Write a letter to thank our
council members for protecting the health of our community and Hawaii’s
agricultural lands, and encourage Mayor Billy Kenoi to sign Bill 113 into law.”
Supporters
of the measure filled the council chambers at the West Hawaii Civic Center with
applause after the vote late Tuesday, according to the Hawaii Tribune-Herald.
“We’re
stoked. We’re relieved,” resident Blake Watson told the newspaper. “This is a
great first step.”
“We are at
a juncture,” Councilwoman Margaret Wille, who introduced the bill, told
Honolulu Civil Beat. ”Do we move forward in the direction of the agro-chemical
monoculture model of agriculture, or do we move toward eco-friendly,
diversified farming?
At least
two farmers’ groups supported the measure—the Hawaii Farmers Union United,
whose focus is on family farms, and the Kona Coffee Farmers Association.
Farmers
supporting the bill said they fear cross-pollination between modified and
non-modified crops, which they say can hurt or even close their markets.
Papayas
were exempted in the Big Island bill because most of the 200 papaya plantations
in Hawaii are planted with genetically engineered trees. A team of scientists
modified the DNA of the papaya in the 1990s to withstand a devastating ringspot
virus.
Large
biotech companies like Syngenta, Monsanto, Pioneer, Dow and BASF have long been
experimenting with GMO crops and seeds in Hawaii. They have farms on the
islands of Oahu, Kauai and Molokai, but they’ve never operated on Hawaii’s Big
Island.
The world’s
biotech giants have set up shop in Hawaii in recent years, attracted by
year-round growing conditions and an ecosystem favorable for testing and growing produce such as seed corn. The biotechnology industry has all but
completely supplanted the sugar cane and pineapple industries that used to
dominate the Hawaiian landscape.
The Big
Island bill comes just days after Kauai County Council overrode a mayoral veto
on a bill that mandates disclosure of GMO crops.
Anne Lopez,
spokeswoman for the Attorney General’s Office, said earlier this fall that the
office has no plans to weigh in on the Big Island’s proposed ban or challenge
it if it’s adopted.
“We have
not analyzed it to come up with a legal opinion,” she said.
In 2008,
the county adopted a ban on GMO coffee and taro that has not been legally
challenged.
Watch this
interview with Councilwoman Wile from Big Island Video News:
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